Times Herald-Record

Jury selection continues in Trump’s NYC trial

Car crashes, Lyme disease, crop damage among costly problems as habitat grows

- David Robinson

More than 70,000 New Yorkers suffer injuries or financial hardships after their vehicles hit deer on roads each year, with an average repair bill of $4,000.

Another 7,000 residents fall seriously ill each year with severe pain, headaches and other debilitati­ng symptoms of Lyme disease — caused by bites from parasitic ticks that feed on deer to survive.

New York farmers also estimated their deer-related crop damage losses to be about $59 million per year, state records show.

And these costs are expected to get worse as the warming climate allows more deer to thrive across large swaths of New York.

Creating a perfect deer habitat

Threats to humans from deer — which are primary hosts of adult ticks and crucial in spreading a range of illnesses — are already playing out in communitie­s throughout New York, Cornell University Professor Bernd Blossey said.

NEW YORK – Which is harder to find: a seat on the subway during rush hour or the jury needed for former President Donald Trump’s New York criminal trial?

Trump faces 34 felony counts of falsifying business records to conceal hush money payments to adult film actor Stormy Daniels via his former lawyer Michael Cohen. Prosecutor­s allege the falsificat­ion was done to conceal federal campaign finance violations, making the crimes felonies. Trump has pleaded not guilty.

The court called upon 500 New Yorkers to glean the 12 jurors and several alternates. An interactio­n Tuesday morning with one of them showed the challenge.

Jurors aren’t expected to have been living under a rock, Joshua Steinglass

“The deer come to us because what we have created is perfect deer habitat,” he said, referring to the gardens, farms, parks and other deer food sources built into many communitie­s.

But deer overabunda­nce, in many ways, stemmed from the first half of the 20th century. At the time, state environmen­tal measures helped replenish deer population­s after rampant deforestat­ion and uncontroll­ed hunting wiped out 95% of the country’s deer in the 19th century.

Yet tracking and managing supersized deer population­s today remains extremely difficult, raising concerns that climate-driven spikes in deer could quickly spiral into traffic and public health nightmares.

What happens when deer and New Yorkers clash

Some local, state and federal efforts to reduce deer numbers in New York underscore­d the dangerous clashes between societal developmen­t and nature.

In several upstate communitie­s, government-sanctioned sharpshoot­ers fan out at night, using rifles with noise suppresser­s and infrared scopes to pick off deer encroachin­g on neighborho­ods.

On Staten Island, a deer sterilizat­ion program has reported gains in reducing deer numbers, despite some experts’ skepticism of deer population estimates.

Hundreds of thousands of deer also get killed each year by hunters, as state Department of Environmen­tal Conservati­on biologists control permitting to limit the risk of deer overwhelmi­ng certain regions.

Where are the worst deer problems in NY?

Milder winters over the past decade have already altered deer migration patterns in the Northeast. Deer must no longer seek warmer areas to survive winter, fueling larger population­s in parts of upstate and the Adirondack­s.

Meanwhile, deer have settled in some suburbs and cities where green spaces offer ample food and refuge from hunters. Dozens of communitie­s from the Finger Lakes to the Hudson Valley were formally tagged for an overabunda­nce of deer in a 2021 state report.

In some locales, state and local measures limiting or prohibitin­g hunting contribute­d to the overpopula­tion of deer, said Brendan Quirion, a big-game biologist with the DEC.

The hunting region that includes Westcheste­r County, for example, only allows bow-hunting under a decadesold state law, which state environmen­tal agents have urged lawmakers to repeal amid rising deer threats.

Other parts of the state have struggled with declining interest in hunting, in general. And many of those who do hunt prefer to kill bucks, or males, for the antler trophy, despite the fact culling antlerless doe, or females, is better for managing population.

“If we continue to see mild winters,” Quirion said, “we’re going to have to evaluate other management tools and strategies.” That could include, he added, conducting more outreach and permitting that targets the diverse mix of hunting problems statewide.

How NY deer population­s tracked

Further, researcher­s are constantly seeking new ways to estimate deer population­s. They’ve tried counting deer using flyovers and cameras stationed in forests. Some have even looked into calculatin­g deer numbers by tracking their droppings.

But all the existing efforts have huge margins for error, including the most commonly cited estimates based on deer hunting reports.

“The assumption is that deer numbers have increased, but nobody can be sure about that,” said Blossey, who is chair of the Cornell deer management committee.

Still, deer harvest data in New York offers some useful insights into trends, despite the fact statistics are impacted by the number and effectiven­ess of hunters each season, according to analysis by the USA TODAY Network. Among the findings:

● Hunters killed an estimated 231,961 deer during the 2022 hunting seasons, a 10% increase from the prior year.

● From 2000 to 2010, the annual average deer harvest totaled about 237,000, up about 8% from the 1990s.

● The 2000 to 2010 average was up about 35% from 175,000 deer killed per year in the 1980s.

● Deer harvest totals in recent years have seen a drastic spike from the 1950s when tracking of the kills began and averaged about 57,000 per year.

Will climate change ignite deer population explosion?

While biologists expect deer to thrive in the Northeast thanks to warming climate, a range of factors could prevent population­s from reaching cataclysmi­c levels.

A variety of illnesses impact deer population­s, including chronic wasting disease that has been infecting anywhere from 10% to 25% of deer in 29 states, killing hundreds of thousands of deer, federal records show.

Another deer management battlefron­t could increasing­ly involve curbing deer access to food supplies on farms and in suburbs and cities.

“If we are not doing anything, deer will eat themselves out of house and home and that will limit deer population­s,” Blossey said. “However, one thing we are doing is growing crops and gardens, and large deer population­s in suburban and urban areas are subsidized by us.”

 ?? DANIEL DELOACH/UTICA OBSERVER-DISPATCH FILE ?? A deer hops from the road to the sidewalk near the Utica Zoo in Utica.
Aysha Bagchi, Bart Jansen,
Eduardo Cuevas and Anna Kaufman
DANIEL DELOACH/UTICA OBSERVER-DISPATCH FILE A deer hops from the road to the sidewalk near the Utica Zoo in Utica. Aysha Bagchi, Bart Jansen, Eduardo Cuevas and Anna Kaufman
 ?? ??
 ?? KELLY MARSH/FOR THE TIMES HERALD-RECORD ?? A deer walks through the woods behind a home in Monroe on Sept. 8, 2022. The warming climate has allowed more deer to thrive across large swaths of New York.
KELLY MARSH/FOR THE TIMES HERALD-RECORD A deer walks through the woods behind a home in Monroe on Sept. 8, 2022. The warming climate has allowed more deer to thrive across large swaths of New York.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States